Interface Communications give a new identity to BMA
MUMBAI: Interface Communications has designed a new logo for the Bombay Management Association (BMA).
The all-new identity reflects the changes that are sweeping management thinking. The new logo is a vibrant expression of contemporary management thought and has been conceptualised to support the new brand experience that the association aims to provide.
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Commenting on the design, Interface Communications NCD Robby Mathew said, “Every element in the logo has a story to tell. For example, the lower case used in the logo brings alive a more open culture that typifies today’s management thinking and one that welcomes participation from the younger generation.”
The new logo celebrates a more collaborative culture that is today’s mantra. The letter ‘m’ in the logo also graphically captures this collaboration and the coming together of two management professionals. Different colours cue the different areas of learning, knowledge-sharing and enhancing managerial competencies that bma promotes.
Commenting on the new logo, L&T BMA president and senior vice president (corporate human resources) Yogi Sriram said, “Lord Tennyson wrote ‘the old order changeth yielding place to the new…’. Bombay or Mumbai has seen dramatic changes in its corporate landscape. The pulse beat of business in modern India can be felt most significantly in Mumbai. The pulse is epitomized by youth, color, vibrancy and energy and is ensconced in the new logo of BMA that represents this story of change and robust enthusiasm”
On the same lines, BMA VP and Asterii Analytics executive director Niteen Bhagwat said, “This design is a bold step and is a dramatic departure from the past in design and expression, without losing out on the core values of BMA which remain unchanged”.
The old logo of BMA symbolised management thinking that was prevalent 60 years ago. A person standing on the podium with all initials in capital letters represented a very different style of management, a top down management approach and the authority that management was supposed to exude.
Brands
Boeing appoints Barun as head of FP&A for global engineering function
Seasoned finance leader to steer budgets and strategy across global centres
BENGALURU: Boeing’s finance cockpit has a new pilot, and he is no stranger to turbulence or transformation. Boeing has appointed Barun as head of FP&A for global engineering, placing him at the centre of financial strategy for its worldwide engineering and technology operations.
Based in Bengaluru, Barun steps into a role that is as expansive as it is critical. He will serve as the primary finance lead for Boeing’s Engineering and Technology Centers globally, working closely with executive leadership to shape financial decisions, manage complex budgets, and design scalable finance processes that support the company’s growing engineering footprint.
In a note announcing his move Barun said, “I’m excited to share that I’ve joined Boeing Global Engineering. This opportunity is incredibly meaningful to me not just from a professional standpoint, but also for what Boeing represents globally.” He added that he looks forward to contributing to an organisation that continues to shape the future of aerospace and innovation.
Barun’s mandate spans strategic financial leadership, operational oversight, and stakeholder engagement. From directing large-scale budgets and schedules to influencing long-term organisational goals, the role blends financial discipline with business foresight. He will also lead cross-functional teams and partner with finance colleagues worldwide to support engineering programmes across geographies, including India.
The appointment caps a long stint at Juniper Networks, where Barun spent over a decade, most recently as finance senior manager. There, he led FP&A for global product business units and G&A functions, driving budgeting, forecasting, and long-range planning. He also played a key role in enterprise-wide transformation, including spearheading an Oracle to SAP ERP migration and building advanced analytics capabilities using tools such as Tableau and SAP Analytics Cloud.
His earlier career includes finance leadership roles at Sony India Software Centre, Cognizant Technology Solutions, and Mphasis, where he focused on financial planning, governance frameworks, and operational efficiency across global delivery centres.
A chartered accountant from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of India, Barun brings nearly two decades of experience across financial planning, digital transformation, and analytics-led decision making.
His appointment comes at a time when global engineering operations are becoming increasingly complex and distributed, requiring sharper financial oversight and agile planning. With Barun at the helm of FP&A for engineering, Boeing appears to be tightening its financial playbook as it looks to scale innovation with discipline.







